The impact of blogging

blogging_for_dummies.jpgThe blogosphere’s coverage of the Scooter Libby trial prompted James Joyner to make the following insightful observation about the impact of blogging on the processing of information:

When the blogosphere broke open RatherGate, it was through a combination of two things that the mainstream press seldom has: obsession and expertise. There are people out there who simply care more about things like Dan Rather, Scooter Libby, Valerie Plame, or just about any other topic that you can think up than anyone working for any press venue. Similarly, there are people out there who know a whole lot more about the nuances of 1960s era typefaces, perjury law, FISA, or what have you than any working journalist could possibly be expected to know. The combination of these things give citizen journalists a powerful advantage.
Because bloggers donít have to even pretend to be unbiased or interested in ìall the news thatís fit to print,î I wouldnít want to rely on any one blog for my news, or even my commentary. Collectively, though, blogs add an enormous amount of information and insight to the process.

A case study in governmental incompetence

fema-trailers.jpgJust about the time that you think that the bureaucratic bungling of allocating governmental relief funds for New Orleans cannot be topped, another story appears to top the previous one:

In a hurricane-ravaged city desperately lacking health services for the poor, the primary-care clinics that arrived in New Orleans last summer looked to be just what the doctor ordered.
The six double-wide trailers from FEMA, each equipped with eight exam rooms, were supposed to be strategically deployed around the city and provide checkups and other nonemergency health services for the city’s poor and uninsured.
But nearly nine months after they were first delivered, the trailers are still in the parking lot of University Hospital waiting to be deployed, and Louisiana State University officials are angrily asking how the seemingly simple process of bringing them into service got delayed by red tape and political foot-dragging. [. . .]
LSU hospital officials began planning for a temporary network of neighborhood clinics in early November 2005, barely two months after Hurricane Katrina knocked Charity Hospital out of commission and threw health-care services for many of the city’s uninsured into disarray.
Eight months later, in late June and early July, FEMA delivered the trailers to New Orleans, with the $761,000 bill picked up by the federal government.
It wasn’t until last week that the New Orleans City Council agreed to temporarily waive the city’s zoning code to allow the trailers to be located at six schools around the city — three on the east bank and three in Algiers — for two years.
In between fell more than 100 meetings and dozens of e-mails about the issue involving LSU executives and officials at the city, state and federal levels. And the journey is not over. The zoning waivers still need approval from Mayor Ray Nagin, which cannot occur until next week at the earliest, as well as permits from the city that could take up to six months to acquire.
Donald Smithburg, who heads LSU’s hospitals division, said university officials have stood ready to operate the clinics — each of which require one doctor, two nurses and administrative staff — since last summer, which is when LSU officials first approached the City Council about a zoning change for the clinics.
He said he was flummoxed by the continued delays. “It’s been a procedural mystery as to how we get these trailers placed,” Smithburg said.

Read the entire sordid tale.

Thinking about diet and exercise myths

scale%20and%20question%20mark.jpgOne of my goals this year is to blog more on issues relating to nutrition and exercise, which are two of the most myth-generating subjects in American culture.
Along those lines, contrary to the information about the latest fad diets that bombards most Americans on almost a daily basis, this Sandy Szwarc post explains the reality — diets do not work, at least for most people most of the time.
Similarly, long cardio workouts are often recommended as a way to burn calories for overweight folks, most of whom look absolutely miserable doing them. As Art DeVany explains, too much cardio actually has the opposite effect — long workouts will likely make a person fatter.